<p dir="ltr">My only reservation is that, since it IS an ad, other businesses in future might use this as a precedent to paint ugly ads on buildings. We need to work out some principles for murals and ads.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Meanwhile, why not seek an injunction to protect this beautiful one from being painted over, while a policy for the future is decided?</p>
<p dir="ltr">Eleanor<br></p>
<div class="gmail_quote">On Aug 28, 2013 11:08 AM, "Gregory C. Michalenko" <<a href="mailto:gcmichalenko@uwaterloo.ca">gcmichalenko@uwaterloo.ca</a>> wrote:<br type="attribution"><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">
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<div style="direction:ltr;font-size:10pt;font-family:Tahoma">Dear Grenlings and Friends,
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<div>The young manager of the Dairy Queen at University and Weber in Waterloo commissioned six local artists to paint a mural on the side of the store. It's delightful and creative, a true celebration of the the culture of ice cream. But the stuffy sign
bylaw official of the City wants it to be removed because she considers it advertising since it does include a product (it does show ice cream cones being shot out of what looks like a bazooka designed in outer space) and also murals are only allowed in the
centre of the city. Now Dairy Queen Canada wants it removed as well. It is a really stupid situation.</div>
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<div>Why am i making this appeal? By and large, KW and Cambridge fall far short of what culturally vibrant cities should look like. So much creativity is stifled. Here's a funny example. The City of Waterloo, as well as mostly prohibiting murals, has also
banned residents from having small chicken coops in their back yards. But in Portland, Oregon, a mid-sized city that is amazingly progressive, whether for its environmental policies or its promotion of culture, chickens are not only allowed, but there is
an annual "Tour de Coops" for the public, promoted by a group of artists and architects to showcase a competition for the most fanciful and lovely chicken coop architecture. </div>
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<div>IF YOU WANT TO SEE WHAT ENLIGHTENED CIVIC POLICIES ENCOURAGING MURAL ART CAN DO FOR A CITY, open the attachment to see an amazing power point about murals in Winnipeg (there are examples from France as well). When I look at what Winnipeg, a city not
at all as economically well off as Waterloo, has done by promoting murals to beautify the city and encourage creative public art, and compare it to dull Waterloo, where the best we can come up with for public art is a rusty bell, I almost cry.</div>
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<div>Could you take a moment to email or call the mayor of Waterloo and appeal that the mural be saved, perhaps by simply exempting the mural from the sign bylaw? The phone number is 747-8700.</div>
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<div>In the name of art and ice cream alike,</div>
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<div>Greg Michalenko </div>
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